13. Fact: South Sudan has 20 different ethnic groups. This helps to explain why it is failing because: Too many ethnic groups in one state can lead to ethnic competition. Disputes over boundaries or distribution of power can cause the ethnic groups to declare independence and become its own nation-state, thus tearing the state apart. 14. Fact: South Sudan has 7 different languages. This helps to explain why it is failing because: Many different languages in one state makes it difficult for different groups of people to communicate with one another. Without every person in South Sudan being able to speak and understand one language, they cannot work together to fix the problems occurring within the state. 15. Fact: Dinkas make up 35.8%
Witness the state of South Sudan dramatic developments began , according to the novel government , trying a range of Republican Guard forces , known as " Tiger " , to control the ammunition depot continued to lead the army in the capital, Juba , to explode clashes , perimeter defense headquarters , between the Republican Guard and the army's power costly secure warehouse on the one hand , and between the attacking group on the one hand , to announce the President of the Republic , Salva Kiir , the head of the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Sudan's ruling , for the failure of an attempt to overturn a military Ikduha his former vice president , Riek Machar , and imposes a curfew , and
Sudan has had internal problems for many years. The country negatively affected itself from within. No outer force caused the issues at hand. Sudan experiences their first civil war in 1956. The issue came from economic, political, and social domination of largely non-Muslim and non-Arab southern Sudanese. The war lasted for about sixteen years and finally concluded in 1972. Unfortunately the violence
Have you ever heard about the civil war that sent 20,000 Sudanese children lost in afraid without anywhere to go. First we will talk about the food and water struggles of the lost boys.The next we will talk about the many casualties in the war. Last we will talk about why the war happened and why it's important.
In 2005, the Civil War in Sudan which has been going on for two decades has finally resolved through the signing of the “Comprehensive Peace Agreement” (CPA). The placement of the CPA was to reform the government into a democracy, also to unify North and South Sudan and to bring peace to Sudan. Unfortunately, the CPA didn’t bring any of those things to Sudan. The failures of the CPA relates back to the oil pipelines, because North Sudan and South Sudan need one another to produce profit from the oil in the country. So if the country isn’t unified the country will remain unstable.
Genocides are things that are very scary and terrible to talk about but when they happen because it causes people to lose family and friends genocides make enemies of people who were friends and once loved each other but there are some people who did not look at it that way they were uneasy and worried to begin with. Sudan as a whole has already dealt with many of violent confrontations since its independence from Great Britain in 1956.
The Sudanese Civil War is a conflict in Sudan between forces of the government and opposition forces of the north and the south.Although this was the start of what is referred to as the civil war, Sudan has been divided by war for centuries, the North African Arabs prayed on the African Christian south, in the 80’s the Sudan’s vast oil resources were discovered. The Sudanese civil wars are generally referred to in three different events; the First Sudanese Civil War (1955-1972), the Second Sudanese Civil War (1983-2005), and the South Sudanese Civil War (2013-present).
This new country was met with high praise and expectations with the United States (US) playing a key role in their accomplishment. Unfortunately, South Sudan faced hardship from the very beginning; it is one of Africa’s poorest and least developed countries even though it is oil-rich and contains the majority of the oil reserves in Sudan.
South Sudan is a land that has been dominated by external powers throughout the past two centuries. These external powers have contributed greatly to the South’s feelings of oppression and lack of development in the region throughout the years. South Sudan began the struggle for freedom during the early nineteenth century, when the Ottoman-Egyptian forces of Muhammad Ali made excursions south of Egypt to the land known as “Bilad Al-Sudan” or “land of the blacks”. Ali was in search of slaves in order to produce an army and successfully annexed the land by 1821. This excursion led to a fierce and firm rule right through the region. Although efforts were made to prevent the practice and trade of slaves along with the rule of the Egyptians, the attempts were largely unsuccessful all throughout the majority of the 1800’s.
The current government of Sudan led by the Arab leader Omar el-Bashir can be blamed for the terror and conflict that enveloped Sudan in the last decades. Omar el-Bashir has always been criticized for only defending and acting on the interests of the Arab Muslims located in the Northern Sudan while ignoring the Christians and Animist population in the south. The conflict that unfolded in these regions along with violence, hostility and dislocation of many people can be connected with the reign of the Arab leader in Sudan. Indeed, this reigning group or culture in Sudan affected not only the Sudanese but also other states in the region and the international community in general, most especially the United States since their reign produced
South Sudan has not been its own separate country for very long. It gained its
In the aftermath of battling a two-decade civil war, South Sudan has ultimately seceded from its former country, Sudan, in the year of 2011. Following its independence, South Sudan attempted to fabricate a modern governmental system in hopes of terminating its authoritarian past. Although South Sudan strived to follow a democratic reform, their system, however, was structured in a manner that failed to resolve both social and economical disputes. The dissimilarities between major ethnic groups, a lack of education, and the halt in oil production made it difficult for South Sudan to flourish as a unified nation. Therefore, considering these issues, the United Nations Special Task Force on South Sudan, has made recommendations that
South Sudan has been at war with Sudan in the North, disadvantaging food production and consumption. The war resulted in the independence of South Sudan six years after the war ended. Roughly two million people died as a result of war, famine and disease caused by the
South Sudan is currently facing many problems. Its economic problem is of utmost importance because its economy is
Since its independence of 1956 to date, Sudan has witnessed 2 attempted revolutions to overthrow the regime. For years, the Sudanese population yearned for
After being independent, Republic of South Sudan came into existence amid great challenges and marked a major milestone and fresh opportunity for South Sudanese. Nevertheless, massive state-corroding corruption, political instability within the ruling party, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) and determined tensions with Sudan over the sharing of oil revenues, internal displacement caused by tribal conflict and fighting between government and militias and food security made South Sudan vulnerably returning back the conflict. Moreover, the areas along the border between South Sudan and Sudan were affected by conflict since the former declared independence in 2011, which are Abyei, the Blue Nile region and South Kordofan.